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  Judge to Review Sex-Abuse Settlement

By Brett Barrouquere
Associated Press, carried in The Courier-Journal [Louisville KY]
January 8, 2006

http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060108/NEWS0104/601080386/1008/NEWS01

Receiving a settlement check for abuse at the hands of a priest did not stop Kay Montgomery's memories of what happened to her.

Montgomery, who settled with the Catholic Church in January 2005 for an undisclosed amount of money, predicted that victims in the class-action lawsuit against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Covington, Ky., will find a similar lack of satisfaction.

"It would be nice if it were that easy," said Montgomery, who was abused as a teenager in the 1960s by a priest from Blessed Sacrament Church in Fort Mitchell.

"We still have to live our lives and deal with what happened to us."

The victims in the case against the Covington diocese will get another day in court tomorrow.

Judge John W. Potter is expected to rule on whether to grant final approval to the proposed settlement of up to $120 million, which would allow the church and insurance companies to begin paying some of the 373 victims -- among the largest pools of known victims in the country. The hearing will be in Boone District Court in Burlington.

The settlement, announced in June, calls for the Northern Kentucky diocese to contribute $40 million to the fund, with its insurance carriers contributing up to $80 million. The diocese, plaintiffs and insurance companies had not announced a settlement in a separate federal lawsuit as of Friday.

If the full $120 million is paid out, it would be the largest such settlement in the nation.

Victims would receive awards ranging from $5,000 to $450,000, based on severity of abuse, and those in the highest category would be eligible to apply to a special fund for extraordinary claims.

Plaintiffs' attorney Stan Chesley said that settling the lawsuit against the insurance companies and getting approval for the settlement with the diocese is the best way to close the case for the victims.

"It's such a sensitive issue," Chesley said. "It's the best way to know we have a measure of justice."

Richard Lillick, 63, who has identified himself as a victim who was molested starting in 1957, said the settlement treats victims with dignity and helps close the issue for some.

"It's an attempt to root out a very grotesque cancer that's been eating at the diocese for years and years," Lillick said. "I can't imagine anything better from our point of view."

But financial settlements don't always "get to the core" of the problem, said William McMurry, a Louisville attorney who helped negotiate a $25.7 million settlement in the sex-abuse case against the Archdiocese of Louisville in 2003.

"What the victims have always wanted was to make a difference, to see more than an apology from the current archbishop," McMurry said.

Dealing with sexual abuse is "kind of an evolving, long process," and while a financial settlement is some acknowledgment of responsibility, it doesn't end the healing process, Montgomery said.

"You root for that big day … but it doesn't make all the difference," Montgomery said. "It's not about money at all. It won't be the end of it."

 
 

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